Comment Come on, just admit it (Score 0) 241
If Mozilla was doing half this to test their bloated piece of crap, you'd all be shitting your pants with glee.
If Mozilla was doing half this to test their bloated piece of crap, you'd all be shitting your pants with glee.
"16 Marketing Managers,HR Directors, and First-Level Help Desk Technicians have decided that routinely testing backups is a waste of effort and not needed at all".
If the attackers place a network sniffer on a customer's internal network...
You've got a hell of a lot bigger problems than pcAnywhere.
The goal of every government agency in any given year is to need 10% more funds than their current budget. You always need more, and never less, because cuts to your budget will mean you are under greater scrutiny the next fiscal year.
So you throw money at every half-baked idea the lab coats present. If something works out, great. If not, that just clearly shows that you need a greater budget next year, since more money = better ideas.
Seriously Slashdot, implement a +6 for this. Comment of the year.
Jamie like big boom.
I mean, I haven't had mod points here in like, forever.
"DIGICERT is in the center of an effective trust model that the government is creating to address the issue of information security and the negative perception that has been painted in association with online transactions." *BREATH*
"Customers won't transact business at your website unless they are certain it's secure."
"The username and static password scheme has been widely used for verification online. Nevertheless, many have recognize this scheme as being obsolete as it can no longer be trusted to provide proper authentication online. There are countless of software distributed freely across the Internet that enables the cracking of passwords. There are also hundreds of web sites that displays 'Most Recently Hacked' passwords."
You can't really call it proper Engrish, but it's just a little off too.
(3) YOUR PSN ACCOUNT NUMBER, IF YOU HAVE ONE
Someone should organize a letter writing campaign. Send them like a million of these, anyone who's willing, even if they don't own a PS3. You know, just in case I ever do decide to purchase one. Make them deal with/file/keep them all.
Lol, I love it.
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No....not 777777. They'll be expecting that.
Come on, it's Two Thousand Fucking Eleven. We still have people setting local admin passwords to "admin" and 123?
"We have 87 million members in our party, based on people having to do the equivalent of signing a Facebook petition!"
"Great! How many of them are going to vote for our candidate?"
"10. No wait, 11, I forgot our candidate can vote for himself."
I think I saw this once on a movie, I believe it was called the Sexual Revolutionary War. Starring Seka and Rocco Siffredi.
Well keep in mind that Windows generating and saving an NTLM was the default setting up until at least Server 2003 (not sure about 2008 but I think they took care of this). Sure, good admins turn this off, but how many systems are there out there where it isn't turned off, or perhaps even turned back on for compatibility reasons?
"It took police two-and-a-half days to find the gun in the Hyundai..."
Those damn guns, always getting lost in the seat cushions or under the floor mats.
6 pm local time is when we've scheduled to end our maintenance time at work tomorrow, replacing the core switch. Huh. I guess it's not going to go so well.
Sorry, everyone. If I'd have known that my work network was in actuality running a virtual instance of the known universe, I wouldn't have ignored all those Kerberos errors. Although in retrospect, a half-ass, thrown together Active Directory environment does explain a lot about the world we live in.
The one day you'd sell your soul for something, souls are a glut.